Ancient Egypt: The New Kingdom

The New Kingdom is composed of the Eighteenth to the Twentieth
Dynasties, following the expulsion of the Hyksos and the
reunification of the country by Ahmose. The New Kingdom was a time
of great prosperity in Egypt. The massive building projects at
Thebes, the religious centre and sometime capital of the period,
demonstrate the power and wealth of the kings of the New Kingdom.
The Temple of Amun at Karnak, the Luxor Temple and the many
mortuary temples on the west bank of the Nile record great battles
and other royal exploits. Several kings of the Eighteenth Dynasty
led campaigns into Palestine, parts of which were brought under
Egyptian control.

The rock cut tombs of kings and private individuals were
lavishly decorated. Most famous of these is the tomb of
Tutankhamun, which shows that royal tombs were provisioned with
treasures. A wide variety of literature from this period has
survived, including funerary, legal, medical and literary papyri,
personal letters and hymns.

The gold resources of the conquered Nubia were heavily exploited
until they were exhausted in the early Nineteenth Dynasty. A less
settled period followed and the threat of the Hittite empire
reached a crisis in the reign of Ramesses II with the battle of
Kadesh. The assassination of Ramesses III marked the beginning of
decline. The New Kingdom ended with a series of weak kings, a
corrupt administrative system, tomb robberies and incursions of
Libyans into the Theban region.